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Read Cockburn and St. Clair's Whiteout: the CIA, Drugs and the Press and discover how the CIA gave a helping hand to the opium lords who took over Afghanistan, thus ushering the Taliban into power.


CounterPunch: Complete Coverage of 9/11 and the War on Afghanistan

New Print Edition of CounterPunch Published November 28: Kevin Alexander Gray explores the crisis in America's black leadership; an FBI agent's torture confession; liberals see "silver lining" in war; married to a muslim truck driver. Note: CounterPunch has fallen victim to the @home bankruptcy, leaving us without internet access since Friday. Things may not be entirely back to speed for another week. For those of you trying to reach Jeffrey St. Clair, his new email address is: sitka@attbi.com. Subscribe Now!

December 16, 2001

Edward Said
Mahfouz and the Cruelty
of Memory

Bahour and Dahan
Zinni's Doomed Mission

December 15, 2001

John Isaacs
Bush's 12 Lumps of Coal
for Christmas

Dana Cook
The Execution of bin Laden

Yusuf Agha
Tale of the Tape:
Osama Gump?

December 14, 2001

Don Atapattu
A Conversation with
Norman Finkelstein

December 13, 2001

Trojanow and Hoskote:
Nonsense Mantras of Our Times

Dr. A. Tajudeen
Afghanistan and Zaire

Michael Williams
Prohibit Prohibition

December 12, 2001

Jack McCarthy
Hitchens, Walker
and Osama's Tape

Laura W. Murphy
Ashcroft's Jihad

Shahid Alam
Race and Visibility

December 11, 2001

Joshua Orton
University of Wisconsin
Won't Aid FBI Interviews

Philip Farruggio
Cleansing the Nation's Soul

Robert Fisk
Why I Was Beaten

December 10, 2001

Robert Dunham
Race and the Death Penalty:
Partners in Injustice

Andy Kershaw
Chamber of Horrors
Near the Garden of Eden

John Touchie
Isaac's on Chomsky

December 9, 2001

Jo Dillon
Journalist: The CIA Wanted
Me Killed

John Chuckman
High-Tech Puritanism

December 8, 2001

Laurence Tribe
Military Tribunals
Undermine the Constitution

Patrick Cockburn
The End of a Strange War

December 7, 2001

John Troyer
Blacklist Me!

Sen. Edwards v. Ashcroft
Military Tribunals

George Naggiar
Occupation as Terrorism

Hugo von Sponek
and Denis Halliday
Iraq the Hostage Nation

David Vest
The Coen Brothers'
Minstrel Show

Alexander Cockburn
Sharon or Arafat:
Who's the Terrorist?

December 6, 2001

CounterPunch Wire
Hampshire College the First
to Condemn the War

Robert Jensen
University Teaching After
September 11

Jack McCarthy
Does Tom Friedman Read
the New York Times?

Sam and Leila Bahour
The Psychology of a Suicide Attacker

December 5, 2001

Edward Hammond
The Only Real Way to
Prevent Biowarfare

Harvey Wasserman
Atomic Treason in the House

Carl Estabrook
America's Israel

Don Williams
Questions Barbara Walters Didn't Ask George Bush

Cockburn/St. Clair
Liberals Hail War as
Return of Big Government

Robert Fisk
The Last Colonial War?

Bahour/Dahan
It's About the Occupation

December 4, 2001

Dave Marsh
A Plea for Byron Parker

Rep. Ron Paul
Keep Your Eye on the Target

Susan Herman
Ashcroft and the Patriot Act

Tariq Ali
The Afghan King and the Nazis

November 30, 2001

Jordan Green
Disappeared in the Southland

Willliam Blum
Rebuilding Afghanistan?

November 29, 2001

Phillip Cryan
Defining Terrorism

Robert Fisk
We Are the War Criminals Now

November 28, 2001

Tom Turnipseed
A Continuum of Terror

Patrick Cockburn
Tribal Council:
Don't Blame It All on Taliban

Robert Fisk
At Last, The Truth about the Sabra and Chatila Massacres

Harry Browne
The Bill of Rights:
They Threw It All Away

Sunil Sharma
Suffer Palestine's Children

November 27, 2001

Paul Coggins
Kafka and the Patriot Act

Tariq Ali
Tigris and Euprhates

November 26, 2001

Robert Fisk
Blood and Tears in Kandahar

Jeffrey St. Clair
Boeing's Sweet Deal

CounterPunch Wire
Human Rights Abuses and
Nuke Waste Shipments

Alexander Cockburn
Harry Potter and Terrorism


A Photographic Journal of Life in an Afghan Refugee Camp
By Judith Mann

Resources:
100s of Links About 9/11


CounterPunch:
Complete Coverage of 9/11 and Its Aftermath


Five Days That
Shook The World:
Seattle and Beyond

By Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair
Photos by Allan Sekula

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Published Oct. 15, 2001

8-Page Special Issue

War Diary

CIA's Assassination Plan a History of Torture in US Prisons

bin Laden and Bush Business Connections

Aisha Ikramuddin on the Hidden Hype of US Food Bombs

Peter Linebaugh on Pakistan

Christopher Hitchens' Love for Mrs. Thatcher

Jiang Zemin Tells Bush:
Nuke 'Em


Search CounterPunch

Read Whiteout and Find Out How the CIA's Backing of the Mujahideen Created the World's Most Robust Heroin Market and Helped to Finance the Rise of the Taliban and Osama bin Laden

Whiteout:
CIA, Drugs & the Press

by Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair

The Memphis Blues Again:
Six Decades of Memphis Music Photographs
Photos by Ernest Withers
Text by Daniel Wolff

The New Intifada:
Resisting Israel's Apartheid

Edited by Roane Carey

A Pocket Guide to
Environmental Bad Guys
by James Ridgeway
and Jeffrey St. Clair

The Phoenix Program
by Douglas Valentine

Al Gore:
A User's Manual
by Cockburn
and St. Clair

Buy This Explosive
New Book at an
Amazing Discount!
 

Reviews of Gore:
a User's Manual


Private Warriors
by Ken Silverstein

CounterPunch's Booktalk

December 16, 2001

Arabs in America

"Dangerous by Definition"?

By Amira Howeidy
Al-Ahram

It is no longer surprising, nor is it ironic. In the US, many observers, rights activists and civil liberties groups are failing even to wonder at the glaring paradoxes of America 's readiness to shatter away its once established image as a protector of freedoms.

And wonder they might. The US Department of Justice (DOJ) is refusing to disclose information on more than 1,000 detainees -- largely men of Middle Eastern descent -- arrested in connection with 11 September. Now, 18 US- based rights groups have decided they will not take silence for an answer. On 5 December, they filed a law suit against the DOJ under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) demanding the disclosure of basic information on those who, in the eyes of many rights activists, have been "kidnapped " by the US government.

Exactly how many have been detained or arrested? Who are they? What are their nationalities? Why where they arrested? These and many other questions need to be answered, as concern over the fate of these individuals rises. "Nobody has this information -- which is why we filed the law suit, " according to Carol Khawly, legal advisor to the Arab-American Anti- Discrimination Committee (ADC), one of the plaintiffs

Here is what we do know. Many, if not the majority, of these individuals are of Arab origins. "Thousands " have been rounded up amidst an extremely foggy environment where everything is kept secret from everyone -- even from officials representing the countries of these individuals. One of the objectives behind the Egyptian foreign minister 's visit to the US last week was voicing official concern about the Egyptians who have been detained since 11 September. According to George Hermina, a lawyer who is representing the Egyptian Embassy in the US, Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher specifically asked for a list of all the detained Egyptians "but by the end of last week, to the best of my knowledge, he hadn 't got it, " Hermina told Al-Ahram Weekly.

According to informed sources, Saudi officials expressed similarly serious concerns over the blocking of information on detained Saudis, who are believed to constitute the majority of those arrested. Other nationalities that have been rounded up include Yemenis, Lebanese and Palestinians. Although no information on the number of Egyptians has been revealed, Hermina suspects that they number "less than 100. "

A judge has already been assigned to hear the lawsuit but it is not known when the case will be resolved. "The Justice Department consistently refuses to provide the information necessary to guarantee to the American public that those jailed since 11 September are being accorded the constitutional protections guaranteed to all people in America by the Bill of Rights, " according to Steven R Shapiro, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Kate Martin, director of the Center for National Security Studies -- another of the 18 plaintiffs -- went even further. "Since we first asked for this information, there is mounting evidence that secrecy is being invoked to shield serious violations of individual rights and not for legitimate investigative purposes, " she said. "Instead of simple announcements by the attorney-general claiming that they are respecting the constitution, we need evidence that will show whether that is true. "

David Sobel, who is acting as general counsel for the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said that this case "involves a matter of extraordinary public interest and presents one of the strongest rationales for expeditious disclosure ever presented to the federal courts. "

The action was filed in federal district court in Washington. Among the plaintiffs are several reputable organisations including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the Center for National Security Studies and the Electronic Privacy Information Center. Also joining in the filing of the lawsuit are the American-Arab Anti- Discrimination Committee, the Arab American Institute, the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, the Council on American Islamic Relations, Human Rights Watch and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. On 29 October, the plaintiff organisations requested disclosure of detainee information from the Justice Department under the FOIA. They asked for information on the identity of the detainees, where they are being held, the names of their lawyers, which courts are involved, how long the detainees have been held and the nature of any charges filed against them.

In late November, the Justice Department released information about the detainees which the ACLU described as "partial and fragmentary. " For the most part, the information released fell far short of satisfying the FOIA request.

"If the government withholds all the basic information about what it has been doing, it is impossible for the public to assess whether or not the investigation into the crimes of September 11 has been reasonable and effective, " said Hussein Ibish, communications director of the American- Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. "Democratic government requires that citizens know what the government is doing in their name, " he added.

On 6 December -- the day following the filing of the law suit -- US Attorney- General John Ashcroft testified before congress. All he said in relation to the arrested individuals was that "we have waged a deliberate campaign of arrest and detention to remove suspected terrorists who violate the law from our streets. Currently, we have brought criminal charges against 110 individuals, of whom 60 are in federal custody. The INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service] has detained 563 individuals on immigration violations. "

According to Hermina, "there are no Arabs or Egyptians held without a specific violation of the law. " In the many cases he has seen, he described how he has found "students that overstayed their visa in the US, or someone who came to the US on a visitor visa and stayed. Normally the US government doesn 't have the resources to put into deporting people that break their visa conditions but because of 11 September, greater attention is being paid to such violations. " Police are able to detain more people "and enforce those laws which generally have been overlooked due to budgetary problems and due to lack of interest. " Hermina pointed out that, due to the background of those involved in the 11 September attacks, "the government are looking at people of Arab background more carefully. "

Although there is no indication that the arrests have stopped -- Carol Khawly, for one, believes they have actually continued -- the DOJ is also pursuing its focused investigation on Arabs in other ways. It is conducting a so-called "voluntary interview programme " involving 5,000 men of Middle Eastern descent. The programme -- which, according to the ADC, "smacks of racial profiling " -- is believed to be an alternative way to question Arabs who reside in the US but have not violated the law, and thus cannot be arrested. Quite how "voluntary " the interviews are remains unknown "because it 's a new programme, " argues Denyse Sabbagh, a lawyer who is representing one of the detained Arabs.

Sabbagh told Al-Ahram Weekly that this is "a new voluntary interview programme for Middle Eastern men aged between 18 and 33 who have entered the US since January 2000 on non immigrant visas. According to the Justice department, none of those being requested to volunteer for the interviews are considered suspects or associated with the terrorist activities. They simply think it is a way that they might be able to obtain information. "

However, Sabbagh pointed out that in a meeting that was held with the FBI and the US attorney in the district, "we asked if they were going to tell those being interviewed that they are allowed to have a lawyer present. The answer was no. " The motivation behind this was that "the interviews are voluntary and they didn 't want it to seem like an interrogation. " In many of these interviews, "they will be asking the person about their family members or friends. A lot of it is going to be who they know and who those people know, " Sabbagh said. She noted that the interviewees might be afraid about revealing immigration violations of others but the government "cannot provide assurances that nothing will happen to them. "

On 24 November, the Detroit Free Press printed information about the interview programme, based on an eight page memo sent to it by the DOJ. According to the newspaper, those Arabs who do end up on the list of 5,000 interviewees will be asked questions ranging from whether they sympathise with the 11 September hijackers to where they have travelled and whether they own guns or have scientific training. Information gathered in the interviews, which began last week, is to be entered into an electronic database.

In the memo, Justice Department officials write that the men they are seeking are not criminal suspects and are not obliged to talk. Many of the questions are obvious and to the point, such as whether the interviewee knows anyone connected to the 11 September attacks or knows anyone trained in terrorism. Other questions are clearly intended to elicit information on political leanings and personal travels, however. Interviewers are instructed to ask the men for their phone numbers, and those of their family; whether their educational training includes "scientific expertise; " whether they have visited Afghanistan, or ever been in an "armed conflict. "

The men will be asked why they are in the United States and what landmarks they have visited. They will also be asked how they felt when they heard the news of the 11 September attacks, and whether they sympathised with the hijackers. The memo emphasises that interviews will be voluntary, but it says that questioners "should feel free to use all appropriate means of encouraging an individual to cooperate, including reference to any reward money. "

Although American officials have not missed a chance to emphasise none of this is directed purposefully at Muslims or Arabs in general, the Arab and Muslim community in the US says it nevertheless suffers from anti-Muslim bigotry. ADC, for example, recently exposed statements made by Republican Congressman Saxby Chambliss, who represents Georgia and is chairman of the House Subcommittee on Terrorism and Homeland Security. He said that to combat terrorism, a Georgian sheriff should be turned loose to "arrest every Muslim that comes across the state line. "

Although Chambliss said he was "joking, " ADC have called for his resignation to offset the wave of hostility directed at Arabs and Muslims since 11 September. As one Arab civil liberties activist said recently, the US authorities seem to regard Arabs as "dangerous by definition. "